144 You spend so much time (and his money) on your own hair Watch out! He may love it almost as much as he does you. This is the famous one from Europe now made in the U.S.A. A deep-conditioning lotion that works at once to give hair body, brilliance, vitality. Helps thin hair look thicker, healthier. Really does! All this a it holds the hair in place, makes it most manage- able. In several types with or with- out oil. In about $3.50 and $5.50 sizes. At good stores including B. Altman & Co. Filene's Marshall Field & Company Rich s, Atlanta I. Magnin & Co. Be nice and give him the great Swiss Conditioner Hair Lotion de Pantene H ... '^ ;... <<', <\ ..} ' , ";;:õ ::>:', ^""'" .-..;co "'''-;''' .. :;: ..... C\( C\( o o - ,:;,.,,' " i , " , \ - * '" $-4 o > :: cu z -'-'. .:-;.:., ">.^",o,: :' "" " cu 0> <: = o U) :a It') It') It') c.. e o u cu = cu oW c: cu ..c: f-t 4i '\ i ' f i r :I' "- ... "" " 'j:;. *-, , ' , :,1W ::r. .. ::.... ,p ;:": :-:;..... . ,v>",' w'" : ,:,,< :: ': : $160. Another knockout is of black crêpe, and it, as well, gets a high-placed rhinestone belt, this one in a Grecian- key pattern. Karshan ha" also un- earthed a manufacturer named Paul BlumensteIn, who has contrived a three-piece outfit that can be made into a four-piece deal-that is, the skirt can be long or short. The goods is a white brocade with silver threads timidly twin- ing through it. The short and single- breasted jacket has long sleeves and a notched collar. With this goes a loose overblouse, and four glistening buttons ride below the turnover collar; $185 for the lot. Another Arkin is a little love of a thing-a slender, bateau- necked dress with a side-slit skirt, at exactly $1 uO. This time the goods is brocade of the scarf type, in cham- pagne or blue, plus gold and silver. A OTHER item that hasn't been rl. around much lately is black peau de soie, and it was good to find a dress of it at De Pinna, done by Donald Brooks, who could work in burlap and still make me like it. This job is round- necked and sleeveless, and thirty-one self-covered buttons appear on loops that go down one side, from the armpit to the hem. (There are snaps under- neath to do the real fastening, or the tidiest girl of all could get fouled up.) }è SETTE PENNINGTON is another constituent of Trigère, and T ri- gère, forever fond of the combination . of sheer black wool and peau for nIght- time, has done for her a dress with a willowy and low-waisted torso that ends In a deep flounce at the base. If white is the requisite for covered-up cocktail and evening clothes, there IS Teal Trajna's short arrangement in white crêpe, with a band at the neck that goes into a casual loop on the left shoulder, plus bands, an inch and a half wide and seethIng wIth rhinestones, at the tips of the bell sleeves and at the hem. M ORE such clean, emphatic, sim- ple dresses, in black as well as in white, crop up at Saks Fifth A venue. John Moore's symphonic orchestration of black wool crêpe results in a dress with a high cowl neck. It's very proper, and all that, except for the devilment that goes on in back. There, diamonds of bare You, ringed by rhinestones, are visible well down toward the waist As is to be expected of Mr. M., the skirt is widely circular. Trigère is here, too, working on white satin, which she cuts with a high neck and a vastly circular sweep below because of the big trumpet or tulip flares she puts there. The back decolletage of this fashionable object is deep and V-or definitely not non-V. It is the kind of thing that could bring back glide and even slither-real po- etry of motion-instead of the bounce that seems to have got the upper hand (or foot) on our ballroom floors. -LOIS LONG . R.EMEMBER.ING AL THEA When you came out of your house and put your nand on the August day, walls of the barn, delicate in the light, began the season that would ribbon away all that we saw and blow ]t past the world, For after we contended at school, we had our war, sought outward for enemies, awarded each other greatness; and you were left forgotten a while. Why touch what was already ours, when there was more-cities glory? For you held no power, Althea, according to any of us; but after the others asserted, claimed their place, posed for every storm, your true beam found all That August day ]S yours, and every honor You gave away. I remember Jeff, who always won, and Ben, and his sister, that whole class. They are only your chorus, because you waved, and it was far and the end you knew, delIcately, through amber, that August day. -WILLIAM STAFFORD .#